Our brains are more like birds' than we thought

Friday, July 2, 2010 - 11:49 in Biology & Nature

For more than a century, neuroscientists believed that the brains of humans and other mammals differed from the brains of other animals, such as birds (and so were presumably better). This belief was based, in part, upon the readily evident physical structure of the neocortex, the region of the brain responsible for complex cognitive behaviors.

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